Thank you to everyone who helped us distribute information about this missing hiker... Here is information from a news release issued at approximately 10:30 p.m. on August 20.

Missing Hiker's Body Found in Kings Canyon National Park

A body found by searchers in the area northwest of Mount Gardiner in Kings Canyon National Park on the afternoon of Wednesday, August 20, 2014, has been identified as missing hiker Gregory Muck. Muck appears to have fallen in rocky and steep terrain. The cause of the accident is under investigation. The body was transferred to the Fresno County Coroner's Office. A ground search team located the body in their assigned search area.

General Info:
Muck, who was from Santa Cruz, California, was hiking alone in the wilderness of Kings Canyon National Park. On August 10, 2014, Muck departed from the Roads End area of
Kings Canyon National Park. He planned to hike to Gardiner Basin via Gardiner Pass. After several days in the basin, he planned to hike out Gardiner Creek to the Woods Creek Trail and return to Roads End in Cedar Grove by August 17, 2014. On August 18, 2014, at approximately 8:00 a.m., Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks' Dispatch Office was notified of the missing hiker via a phone call from Muck's wife.

Overall Search Staffing:
A total of 71 National Park Service staff and park partners worked on search-and-rescue and
recovery operations from August 18-20, 2014. Search efforts were led by Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, with assistance from Yosemite National Park's Search and Rescue teams, Yosemite's search dog team-YODOGs, and the California Highway Patrol.

Daily Search Staffing Totals:

August 20, 2014: A total of 61 staff and partners searched by ground and helicopter, conducted interviews, and completed recovery operations.

August 19, 2014: A total of 55 staff and partners searched by ground and helicopter, conducted interviews, and planned for the next day's operation.

August 18, 2014: A total of 21 parks' staff searched by ground, conducted interviews, and planned for the next day's operation. In addition, parks' staff handled two other search-and-rescue incidents.

Thank you again,

Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks